The Government
"Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state, an intolerable one." —Thomas Paine
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The Government. Can be Orwellian, also seen as the forces that hide aliens/shot JFK. Major unseen character in Government Conspiracy shows.
Recently, some shows and movies have slightly subverted this with a government that is villainous not due to malevolence or conspiracy, but due to ineptitude, necessity, or sheer size. This is the government that isn't actually out to get you, but isn't interested enough in your plight to notice that there's an Egregious abuse going on. Can be condensed into a single character, a rules-stickler or jobsworth who doesn't much care that your life's on the line: you still have to fill out form 47-B. (Such characters have some overlap with the less sympathetic instances of Inspector Javert.)
See also Democracy Is Bad.
Anime and Manga
- The World Government in One Piece, which seems to be behind at least two conspiracies; one involving the recovery of ancient superweapons, and one involving a cover-up of the world's true history (the so-called "Void Century" during which the World Government came into existence). Apparently, this cover-up necessitates blowing an entire island and everyone on it to kingdom come.
- They also allow a group of people called the World Nobles; one of whom, while riding around on one of his slaves, saw a woman that he liked the look of, and decided to take her as his 13th wife; and he shot the woman's fiancé when he objected. Mind you, that the World Nobles wear bubble helmets with oxygen tanks so that they don't have to breathe the commoners' air; and are completely above the law. In fact, their general portrayal is consistently "worse than it was before".
- You can see them getting worse. Roswald was terrible, but he tried to look dignified. His children on the other hand...
- The crew in Martian Successor Nadesico finds themselves fighting on every side of a three-way brawl between The Government, Corrupt Corporate Executives and an Alien Invasion.
- The Governing Agency and The Safeguard from Blame!. The former is a benevolent yet mostly impotent system that requires regular humans with a extremely rare genetic marker to tell them what to do, while the latter acts like an anti-virus system that happens to see all humans without said gene as viruses.
- Kiddy Grade's Galactic Organization of Trade and Tariffs, or GOTT, is a branch of the Galactic Union (GU), a sort of United-Nations-like government over many of the planets and other locations that have been colonized by humankind across space. And of course, they get their share of conspiracies as well.
- The U.S. Government in Heroman are turning into the secondary antagonists of the series.
Comic Books
- The government in the original V for Vendetta comic series was a metaphor for the British government under Margaret Thatcher. However, in the film version it's a metaphor for the Bush administration, particularly insofar as certain conspiracy theories are concerned.
- The comic also goes out of its way to show it was only after the far left took control and left NATO that the war happened causing the far right to gain control.
- Up until Civil War, when this trope really went to town, the embodiment of this trope in the Marvel Universe was the insufferable Henry Peter Gyrich, the Avengers' official liason in the government. For a short, blissful time in the Busiek/Perez years, the job was filled by Dwayne Freeman, who actually liked the Avengers and wanted to make their lives easier. Of course Dwayne died making a heroic sacrifice to stop Kang the Conqueror, and the Avengers wound up with ol' Gyrich again.
- Geoff Johns at least tried to make Gyrich more sympathetic during the "Red Zone" arc, in which he secretly works with Falcon (his old nemesis from back in the "You're going to be on the team because I say they need a Token Minority!" days) to discover the plots of the corrupt Secretary of Defense (who's actually the Red Skull in disguise). Once Johns was off the title, however, Gyrich not only went back to his old ways, he got worse.
- While obviously more local than other examples here, Sin City has this in spades since one of the most powerful men in the state has a Serial Killer/Pedophile son who is allowed to run free.
- The government in Zombo is basically every stereotype of the Eisenhower, Reagan, and Bush administrations turned Up to Eleven. Also, Donald Trump is President Evil.
Film
- At the end of Cube, one character declares that the eponymous deathtrap was built by the government, but no one in the government really knows why; it just sort of organically grew out of too much red tape and "boundless human stupidity".
- The American and Soviet governments of 2010 also fit the bill.
- Quintessential example: The movie Brazil.
- There is America's totalitarian religious fundamentalist government in Escape from New York/LA. Every government agent we see is practically a Card-Carrying Villain.
- Shooter portrays the government as full of corruption and conspiracies. The hero, in the end, becomes an anti-government terrorist.
Literature
- In David Wingrove's Chung Kuo series, the seven T'ang Lords even seriously discuss wiring the brains of the world's population (all 36 billion of them) in order to achieve total control: track anyone who is present at a riot or rebel attack for example, and send out pain signals as crowd control. Now that's state power.
- Nineteen Eighty-Four.
- Although in this case, the government is actively malicious. It's a world where government policy revolves around keeping the masses under control, silencing dissenters, and using the threat of (effectively identical) foreign governments to keep everyone quiet. So The Government is definitely the villain, but not strictly the kind of villain described in this entry.
- The Ministry of Magic in the Harry Potter books, which seems to become increasingly corrupt as the series advances, reaching Putting on the Reich levels in the final book (after Voldemort took over, but still).
- Actually, it doesn't become more corrupt at all. The atmosphere of the books changes in accordance with Harry's growing up. When he's a kid, he knows that a bad man killed his parents and wants him dead, but as he grows up, he realizes the politics behind everything, and that, while they may be "on his side," the Ministry of Magic is certainly not his friend.
- The Capitol government in The Hunger Games
- In Santiago: A Myth of The Far Future, the title character specifically says "the Democracy isn't truly evil, or even especially corrupt." But he's not willing to accept that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. So when the Democracy pushes against the people of the Frontier, Santiago pushes back.
Live-Action TV
- The US government in The 4400.
- The mysterious "them" in Nowhere Man certainly included the Government.
- The Alliance in Firefly has many of the cinematic connotations of the Evil Empire, while they appear in the text more like The Federation. They appear first as a massive monolithic craft, staffed with a bit of Reich, casting a shadow over the protagonists. While much of their activity involves the enforcement of reasonable laws that the protagonists break, it's generally implied, and eventually confirmed, that they have something of a tendency to overstep their bounds. There are only a few characters ever shown on screen who could be called sinister, and indeed no more within the Alliance (blue hands) than outside of it (Niska), but patterns and dialogue would seem to suggest that it's not infrequent for the Alliance to mobilize its vast resources, which amplifies the effects of their plans. And in the end, a Well-Intentioned Extremist who does what he feels he must turns out to have been misled by problems Inherent in the System, making his personal moral sacrifice a complete waste.
- Prison Break has two forms of government villains: the well-meaning police officers who are just following the rules and capturing the Fox River Eight in order to enforce the law, and the evil vice-president-turned-president's men who want to kill everybody that gets in the way of their massive conspiracy.
- Recent[when?] seasons of 24 have featured terrorist conspiracies operating from within the White House - directed by the president in season 5, the vice president in season 6.
- The new government in Jericho restores order via Private Military Contractors and a healthy dose of help from a major mega-corp. While there is a sinister connection between the corporation and the new government, the average person who works for the new system is usually only as obstructive as the new laws force them to be.
- The X-Files.[context?]
- The short-lived spin off The Lone Gunmen had this as well, although the pilot had the protagonist's father point out that the evil was being done by a very small part and not the entire US government.
- President Clark's corrupt, whitewashing, Psi-corps-controlled government in Babylon 5 certainly fit this trope to a T, especially in the third and fourth seasons.
- Stargate SG-1 averted this. The government, despite doing big cover ups, collaborating with aliens and shooting random people just for having snakes inside their heads are actually the good guys. But there's a rogue faction in NID and later The Trust that seeks to be an example of the trope.
Tabletop Games
- The nightmarishly dystopian Imperium of Man from Warhammer 40,000, when it isn't killing you for your lack of faith, harboring enemies of the state, or for trying to secede, may kill you by accident. Due to the sheer scale of the bureaucracy running Holy Terra, the existence of entire planetary systems can be forgotten due to filing errors, while the processing time for distress signals means reinforcements can arrive generations after the war they were sent to fight is over. It is said that most of the Adeptus Terra spend their time cataloging and recording information centuries out of date, then archiving it in records that will never be read.
- The fluff marches on. As of 5e, the Imperium is pretty good at waging war, and its bueracratic system is functional, if still unwieldy. Reinforments generally arrive within months, and Space Marines can respond within days.
- Not really a change. The bureaucracy that runs the galaxy is completely different than the one that runs the army. The 5th ed. rulebook still says that requests to the Adeptus Terra can result in reinforcements arriving centuries late. The new Imperial Guard codex has some rather dramatic bureaucratic mistakes as well, like accidentally drafting an entire planetary population.
- The same planet, twice. Then they ordered the planet punished for not responding the second time. They also ordered an entire regiment executed for desertion months after they all died heroically in battle.
- Much of the problems with despatching relief to besieged planets is to do with the nature of the Warp, in which time is anything but linear.
- The fluff marches on. As of 5e, the Imperium is pretty good at waging war, and its bueracratic system is functional, if still unwieldy. Reinforments generally arrive within months, and Space Marines can respond within days.
Video Games
- Neo Arcadia from the Mega Man Zero games, which started out as a peaceful city-state where humans and robots lived in peace until it became fascist and genocidal after the death of its leader. Nearly dead, anyways, using his body as a Sealed Evil in a Can, and his lingering consciousness was one of the closest things the series has to a ghost.
- In Metal Gear Solid, The Government starts off as merely being a breeding ground for Machiavellian bastards who don't give a rat's ass about the hero or any other soldier. Later on, it turns out it's being controlled by a really bizarre Government Conspiracy (or even possibly an Ancient Conspiracy) of some sort, which the villain of the original MSX games is implied to have been fighting against.
- The Corrupternment in Disgaea 4: A Promise Unforgotten. It's not supposed to be terribly ideal in the best of times (it's the government of hell after all), but Valvatorez decides it's time they've gotten overthrown when they issue an order to exterminate the Prinnies... Not because Valvatorez especially cares for the Prinnies (nobody does), but because he promised each of them a sardine upon graduation, and he can't go about doing that if they're dead, now can he?
Web Comics
- Represented in The Inexplicable Adventures of Bob by Agent Ben and Agent Jerry.
Western Animation
- The government (specifically, a black ops group known as The Cadmus Project) was the major antagonist for Justice League Unlimited's second season Story Arc, which placed Superman, Mr. "Truth, Justice, and the American Way" in the difficult position of having to fight against the government of the country he loved so much. Fortunately, the head heavy of this organization, Amanda Waller, eventually realizes her main financial backer, Lex Luthor, is manipulating her to destroy the League. As a result, she becomes an ally of the superheroes, although that doesn't mean she wasn't prepared to kill them along with Luthor and herself as well in the climactic episode if they weren't able to defeat him on their own in the final battle to save the planet.